Keller v. Department of Revenue

9 Or. Tax 67
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedApril 8, 1981
DocketTC 1394
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Or. Tax 67 (Keller v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keller v. Department of Revenue, 9 Or. Tax 67 (Or. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

*68 CARLISLE B. ROBERTS, Judge.

The plaintiff appeals from the defendant’s Order No. I 80-3, dated February 26,1980, relating to adjustments made to the plaintiffs personal Oregon income tax returns for the tax years 1975, 1976 and 1977. In each of these years, the defendant’s income tax auditor adjusted Mrs. Keller’s returns by adding to her gross income one-half of the earnings for personal services rendered by her husband in the State of Washington. The pertinent facts have been stipulated, as follows:

“Plaintiff, Astrid S. Keller, and her husband, Charles Keller, moved to Seaside, Oregon, in 1968, and were both residents of Seaside until 1973, when Mr. Keller became a resident of Centraba, Washington, because of a promotional transfer by his employer, Pacific Power & Light Co. Plaintiff continued as a resident of Seaside because she found it to be a nice place to live, and she still resides there, while Mr. Keller has resided in Centraba since his move in 1973. The Kellers, during this period, visited each other frequently both in Seaside and in Centraba, but plaintiff has never had any intention of moving to Centraba and her husband intends to reside in Centraba so long as his employment is there. During the period 1975-1977, there was no breakdown or discord in the Kellers’ marriage relationship.
“At the time plaintiffs husband moved to Centraba, Washington and thereafter, the Kellers never considered whether or not there would be any change in the status of Mr. Keller’s earnings as a Washington resident, from the status of his earnings when he was an Oregon resident, and thus there was no agreement discussed between them concerning the wages received from their respective employers. Throughout 1975 through 1977, plaintiff was employed, and paid all of her expenses from her employment earnings, including the mortgage payment on the Seaside home. Amounts not so expended were deposited in the Kellers’ joint savings account which had been opened prior to Mr. Keller’s move to Centraba. Mr. Keller, during this period, generally caused a portion of each of his paychecks to be deposited in the joint savings account, and no record was kept of the amounts deposited by each of the Kellers. Both Mr. and Mrs. Keller understood that the funds deposited in the joint savings account were available to either one or both of them at any time.
“Plaintiff and her husband filed joint federal income tax *69 returns for the years 1975 through 1977, and plaintiff filed separate Oregon returns reporting all of her employment income and omitting all of the income her husband received from his employment in Centraba, Washington.”

ORS chapter 316, the Personal Income Tax Act of 1969, provides in ORS 316.007 that the policy of the State of Oregon is “to impose a tax on residents of this state measured by taxable income wherever derived * * *.” ORS 316.048 defines the taxable income of an Oregon resident:

“The entire taxable income of a resident of this state is his federal taxable income as defined in the laws of the United States, with the modifications, additions and subtractions provided in this chapter.”

OAR 150-316.048 states:

“Community property income. An Oregon taxpayer whose spouse resides in a community property state is taxable upon the share of his spouse’s community property income which is considered earned by the Oregon taxpayer according to the laws of the community property state.”

ORS 108.015(1) was enacted in 1975 in recognition of the principle that a wife’s civil rights should be the same as the husband’s (i.e., overthrowing the common law rule that the wife’s domicile was established by the husband):

“Each married person may establish and maintain a domicile in the State of Oregon as if that person were not married.”

Washington is a community property state. RCW 6.16.030 provides that:

“Property * * * acquired after marriage by either husband or wife or both, is community property * * *.”

Prior to its amendment in 1972, RCW 26.16.140 provided:

“The earnings and accumulations of the wife and her minor children living with her, or in her custody while she is living separate from her husband, are the separate property of the wife.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Prior to 1972, the Washington Supreme Court, giving consideration to RCW 26.16.140, regularly used the expression “living separate and apart” as synonymous with the statute’s words “living separate.”

*70 This section was substantially amended in 1972, the pertinent part thereof (applicable to the tax years here in question) then reading:

“When a husband and wife are living separate and apart, their respective earnings and accumulations shall be the separate property of each * * *.” (Emphasis supplied.) 1

The general rule is that the law of the domicile governs disposition of personal property. Buresh v. First National Bank, 10 Or App 463, 469, 500 P2d 1063, 1065 (1972), citing Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws 125, § 264 (1971). The status of community property in Washington is determined at the date of its acquisition. In re Witte’s Estate, 21 Wash2d 112, 150 P2d 595 (1944). The personal earnings of the husband belong to the community. Idem. Seaborn v. Poe, 282 US 101, 51 S Ct 58, 75 L Ed 239 (1930).

In the present case, the state of the husband’s domicile, Washington, provided by statute that one-half of his personal earnings immediately vested in his wife, at the time he became entitled to the earnings, and the wife’s domiciliary state, Oregon, had ruled that the wife was taxable upon community income to which she was entitled “according to the laws of the community property state.”

Plaintiffs first objection to the Oregon income tax is that the husband’s Washington earnings were not community property because the plaintiff had never been domiciled in Washington. Stating that there were no Washington cases in point, she cited Lane-Burslem v. Commissioner, 70 TC 613 (1978), and Marguerite T. Payne, 1 TC 360 (1942). The court *71

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Related

Keller v. Department of Revenue
642 P.2d 284 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Or. Tax 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1981.